<sup id="cite_ref-roux_1-1" class="reference">Silicone is a Room Temperature Vulcanizing "rubber like" product. It is an inorganic synthetic elastomer. It is composed of Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, and Silicon, (think silicon dioxide, SiO<sub>2</sub> a major constituent of glass,) reinforced with a filler, usually fumed silica.
Just like rubber, silicone does not "cure" in the sense that we "cure" rock. With rock, 'cure' is a misnomer anyway. We are not relieving any illness or disease in the rock, we are not preserving the rock by adding salt, drying, smoking etc, and it is certainly not vulcanizing like rubber and silicone do. We allow the decay of dead orangic matter to complete, before adding it to the tank, but with a new tank startup, that is a bit silly, but not the topic of this thread.
Silicone does not dry, if it did, it would crack and fall apart. It vulcanizes at room temperature. Vulcanizing by definition, is the process of altering the physical properties by treating it with sulpher, or sulpher compounds, under heat and pressure to improve elasticity and strength, or produce a hard substance. (one such product was called gutta percha in the 1800s, which was the grandfather of modern plastics.)
Silicone is RTV (room temperature vulcanizing"”All silicone is RTV, so packaging stating RTV is not a qualification for "our purposes;" the RTV we speak of is a specific branding by GE/Momentive.
The 'curing' process, called a condensation process, (or tin based cure system) is a bit complicated, but it is the process used for the silicones most often used in the hobby, (not neutral cure,) but reveals some interesting points:
"An alcoxy crosslinker exposed to ambient humidity (i.e., moisture) experiences a hydrolysis step and is left with a hydroxyl group. This group then participates in a condensation reaction with another hydroxyl group attached to the actual polymer. A tin catalyst is not necessary for the reaction to occur, though it increases the rate of the reaction and therefore decreases the cure time. No mixing is required for the reaction to take place. Such a system will cure on its own at room temperature and (unlike a platinum-based system) is not easily inhibited by contact with other chemicals, though the process may be affected by contact with some plastics or metals and may not take place at all if placed in contact with already-cured silicone compounds. It may take as long as a week for the system to cure fully, and as the system requires some water from the atmosphere in order to cure, there is a risk of the surface layers curing enough to seal the lower layers away from the air, resulting in a fluid pocket of uncured and uncurable silicone (this not a risk for addition-based systems). Acetoxy tin condensation is one of the oldest cure chemistries used for curing silicone rubber, and is the one used in household bathroom caulk. The smell of vinegar in the form of acetic acid is the usual indicator that the reaction is incomplete. Non-acid-producing formulations (neutral cure) also exist which have a shorter shelf-life, however, and reduced adhesion when finally cured."
To answer one of your comments, about submerging the curing silicone in water, raising the humidity is a plus, like a 1/8" of water in the bottom of the tank, can speed up the curing process, but it is still best to wait a week or more, because of the copious amounts (over 1/4" beads) used for our application. So, basically it was a waste of time, as there is nothing to "cure" once the silicone is fully vulcanized/crosslinked. Once cured, (fully vulcanized/crosslinked) silicone does not leach anything into the water, and is chemically inert.
Just for grins, silicone is a misnomer as well. The suffix _one is used by chemists to denote a substance with a double-bonded atom of oxygen in its backbone. The thought was erroneous because the polymer does not have oxygen atoms bonded in this matter. The correct term would be polysiloxanes, or polydimethylsiloxanes. These are the type of terms you will find in the MSDS, so it is fairly easy to pick out stuff that "does not fit" in the search for the infamous "mildew inhibitor." In colored silicone, there is a dye that is used in food coloring, so have to watch out for that as well.
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